Forget frying eggs on the sidewalk, never mind the new heat index colors, Australia's record-setting heat wave is so insanely intense that in some areas drivers can no longer refuel their vehicles because the petrol evaporates as it's pumped.

It's super-hot in Australia right now: there are massive bush fires happening spontaneously…
Read more Read more

According to reports, the tiny town of Oodnadatta, located 1000 kilometers north of Adelaide, has faced near continuous 113 degree F temperatures over the past week with a 118 F peak last Tuesday. ''It's like a wall of fire when you walk outside at the moment,'' Mrs Plate, an Oodnadatta resident told The Age. Coincidentally, 113 F is also the temperature at which petrol vaporizes. As such, drivers looking to refuel have to do so in the early morning hours when temperatures are slightly less sweltering.

Over the last 30 years, Australia has gotten 1 degree C hotter on average. And in Oodnatta the mercury has jumped by 33 F during the day and remains 34 degrees hotter at night than it did three decades ago. No wonder the town's 180 residents have to replace their refrigerators twice a year.